Expactation from youth
Hello, every one i want to discuss a very
important topic which is related to our country’s most useful as well as future
power which is youth. our world is
distribute in a group like religion wise ,sector wise ,country wise then most
importantly age wise. And worlds most important strength and future is youth.
many expectation hops dreams are depend on next generation and no dought youth
are the next generation who’s responsibility are most in up coming years. First
start from our country our country has 65 % of young blood.
But the mission and vision in youth are not
at same that’s the resion power of youth
is not effected so every one who really believe grouth of our nation are belive
in youth mentality and them effectiveness.
Ones I have read one article which is
related to out late Dr A.P.J KALAM which is shared below. Who believe youth can
do every things and they able if they focus on each and every moment which
occur in our nation and become sensible on matter of which happened surround us
,some important questions which are as per Kalam sir are describe as below .
Which of the former Presidents inspired you the
most?
I believe every President before me
contributed something in their respective fields — some in politics, some in
education and others in social services. At Rashtrapati Bhawan I found a letter
from our first President, Rajendra Prasad to Nobel laureate Sir C V Raman in
1954 asking him to come to Rashtrapati Bhawan to accept the Bharat Ratna.
Anyone would have jumped at the offer. Then I read Sir CV Raman’s reply to the
invitation.
It said, “Dear Mr President, I thank you for
giving me such a great honour, but I have a problem. I am guiding a scholar and
he is submitting his thesis in December-January. I have to sign the thesis and
won’t be able to accept the invitation.”Also Read: Abdul Kalam-Missile Man to
President: ‘He drove people to think’For Sir CV Raman, his student’s research
meant more than anything else. The Bharat Ratna, of course, was awarded to Dr
Raman in absentia. Rajendra Prasad is one of our great Presidents, so is S
Radhakrishnan, Zakir Hussain and there are a number of other Presidents too.
One of your
passions is the youth of this country. But is there any reason to assume that
the youth is any different from the older generation? What make you optimistic
about the youth?
It’s when children are 15, 16 or 17 that they
decide whether they want to be a doctor, an engineer, a politician or go to the
Mars or moon. That is the time they start having a dream and that’s the time
you can work on them. You can help them shape their dreams. Tomorrow if I
address a group of youngsters and talk about the flag flying in my heart and
how I will uphold the dignity of the nation, I can get them to dream. But if I
talk to people who are 40, 50 or 70 plus, it will not go down that well. Also,
the youth have fewer biases about their society as compared to the grown-ups.
The People’s
President: Reached out his hand and put his foot down as well Do you think
India can successfully develop indigenous defence systems? Many economies in
the world are driven by the type of defence systems they sell. If they don’t
sell defence systems or products that country’s economy will collapse. So
aggressive marketing is going on wherever defence systems are manufactured.
India must learn to be competitive too. Competitiveness involves cost, quality
and marketing.
Bandwidth is the
demolisher of imbalances, a great leveller: A P J Abdul Kalam On your website,
in your e-newspaper Billion Beats, and in all the issues you discuss, there is
an engagement with ideas but it seems as if you are skirting the social context
in which India lives
I will ask you three questions. One, is
providing urban amenities in rural areas an abstraction? No, it is the reality.
India has 6,00,000 villages but few towns and cities. So if you go to my
website, all the lectures will be about how to establish this. Number two, my
website talks about the importance of primary education. Third, a nation that
does not have a vision dies. My 2020 Vision for India is to transform it into a
developed nation. That cannot be abstract, it is a lifeline. That is what my
website and my e-paper talk about.
What was the reaction among senior leaders in the
government, first in the NDA and later in the UPA, to your vision? Were they just
polite or did they take you seriously
First of all, I
don’t have a Kalam vision. India 2020 is a national vision. As Prime Minister,
AB Vajpayee announced ‘India Vision 2020’ in Parliament and then he announced
it at the Red Fort on Independence Day. And he definitely meant it. After
Manmohan Singh took over, at a governors’ conference, he said the government
would do everything to make ‘Vision India 2020’ a reality. No political system
can survive without a vision for the nation
How did the political class respond to a
technocrat President
When I took over
as President, I studied the Constitution and the more I studied it, the more I
realised that it does not prevent the President of India from giving the nation
a vision. So when I went and presented this vision in Parliament and in
legislative assemblies, everyone welcomed it, irrespective of party
affiliations. Vision drives the nation
When you addressed your vision to politicians was
there ever any friction?
Yes, when I
touched upon the political side. For example, when I suggested in Parliament
that we need a two-party system, there was a lot of criticism. It is all part
of the game. That is democracy and that is how we survive
Did any politician ever tell you this is the
business of politics and that you are an oddball ?
No, they were
very comfortable with me. Somehow it clicked because I had no axe to grind.
When I say I have a vision for the development of the nation and its rural
areas, who can say no? Can you find one politician who can say that development
is not necessary for the country? He will not get votes if he does.
In the run up to these elections, there is a
general perception that regional parties are driving a hard bargain, that
national parties have lost ground. What’s your assessment?
This is the era
of coalition politics, whether you like it or not. I had promoted the two-party
system. But the coalition system is what has emerged. A new situation may
emerge. We may have a coalition in the state and a coalition at the Centre and
the two coalitions may become two important political parties – like groupings.
Like-minded people may come together — even if the ideologies are different —
for power or to make the nation prosperous. If you look at the country’s
economic record, economic prosperity happened when coalition governments were
in power.
Some important questions as per view
of our past honorable president are not only for discuss but try to find and
take some steps. And present youth are agree to follow a leader who believe in
unity and give effort for one agenda. Present Youth power is no drought not engrossed
on matter of country or related to society’s issue but its not acceptable to blame
to youth because. Youth power we can mostly find at school collages etc. but at
those place our leaders (teacher ) only focus or engrossed on their syllabus
and other stupid activity which ofcoure divert youth on another track so really
first need to a improve our teachers, because if they give us a task which is
related to our unity our country or our society’s issue I m sure our powerful
power which called youth power dainty will flow on one direction.
Monali Jethwa.
No comments:
Post a Comment